Intracoastal Pipe Serv. v. Assump. Parish Sales and Use Tax Dept.

558 So. 2d 1296, 1990 WL 15817
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 21, 1990
DocketCA 88 0844
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 558 So. 2d 1296 (Intracoastal Pipe Serv. v. Assump. Parish Sales and Use Tax Dept.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Intracoastal Pipe Serv. v. Assump. Parish Sales and Use Tax Dept., 558 So. 2d 1296, 1990 WL 15817 (La. Ct. App. 1990).

Opinion

558 So.2d 1296 (1990)

INTRACOASTAL PIPE SERVICE, CO., INC.[1]
v.
ASSUMPTION PARISH SALES AND USE TAX DEPARTMENT, Assumption Parish School Board, Assumption Parish Police Jury.

No. CA 88 0844.

Court of Appeal of Louisiana, First Circuit.

February 21, 1990.
Rehearing Denied April 25, 1990.

Nathan Gisclair, Jr., New Orleans, for plaintiff Intracoastal Pipe Service.

Jeffery Diez, Gonzales, for defendants.

Before COVINGTON, C.J., and LOTTINGER, EDWARDS, SHORTESS and FOIL, JJ.

COVINGTON, Chief Judge.

Intracoastal Pipe Service Company, Inc. (ITCO), appeals the decision of the district court which held it liable for $80,132.96 in taxes, interest, and penalties relating to its oilfield pipe cleaning and repair services in Assumption Parish. ITCO was assessed $120,368.68 for the period of July 1983 *1297 through July 1986 by the Assumption Parish Sales and Use Tax Department (Assumption), based on activities at ITCO's Amelia facility. After timely paying the full amount assessed under protest, ITCO appealed to the Board of Appeals for Local Sales and Use Taxes (Board), pursuant to La.R.S. 33:2890.3 et seq. seeking a refund. The Board ordered a refund by Assumption to ITCO of $40,235.72, but otherwise basically upheld the assessment. The district court affirmed the action of the Board, and ITCO filed the present appeal. For the reasons hereinafter stated, we reverse in part and affirm in part.

BACKGROUND

Appellant ITCO is a Louisiana corporation with its principal place of business in Harvey (Jefferson Parish). It has a second location at Amelia (Assumption Parish), which has been in operation since 1976. The nature of ITCO's business is to provide various services for tubular goods used in the oil and gas industry. These services are categorized into three general areas: testing and inspection, repairs, and cleaning.

Of these three categories of services, only the category of repairs was ever considered by ITCO to be subject to state or parish sales tax; no such tax was ever charged, collected, or paid by ITCO in connection with the other two types of services, cleaning and testing/inspection. ITCO based this policy on a letter dated February 22, 1968 (the 1968 letter), from the Louisiana Department of Revenue and Taxation, in response to ITCO's specific inquiries regarding the taxable nature of the various services it provided. The letter expressly stated that cleaning and inspection/testing services were not taxable under the Louisiana sales tax statutes, but that repairs were taxable.

On December 12, 1986, ITCO received an Audit Assessment letter from the Assumption Parish Sales and Use Tax Department which stated that ITCO owed Assumption sales taxes of $83,459.16, interest on that amount of $16,747.60, and a penalty of $20,161.92, a total of $119,400.31, for the tax period of July 1983 through July 1986. This amount was corrected to a total of $120,368.68, and was largely based on an assessment of sales tax for services categorized by ITCO as cleaning services, considered non-taxable by ITCO. Assumption alleged that these cleaning services were actually repairs, and therefore taxable under La.R.S. 47:301(14)(g)(i) and its own parish ordinance, Section 1.17(7), which tracks the language of this statute.

ITCO paid the $120,368.68 under protest, and on March 10, 1987, a hearing was held before the Board of Appeals for Local Sales and Use Taxes. At the hearing Assumption asserted an additional argument that the taxes were valid as laundry services under La.R.S. 47:301(14)(e) and the identical provision of the Parish ordinances, Section 1.17(5).

The Board rendered its decision on March 31, 1987, and issued written findings of law and fact in April, 1987, all of which were affirmed by the district court without detailed reasons for judgment. Therefore, our focus in this discussion will be on the Board's findings and conclusions.

All parties agree, and the Board found, that the actual amount of invoices in question is $1,532,855.59. ITCO contends that these invoices represent charges for non-taxable cleaning services in accordance with the 1968 letter from the Department of Revenue and Taxation. The Board held that these transactions were taxable sales of service under Section 1.17, resulting in sales tax due of $63,254.94, together with 12 percent interest, but no penalty or attorney's fees.

The Board also found, as the audit revealed, that ITCO was liable for $17,269.27 of sales tax attributable to services other than cleaning services (repairs). This amount was not and is not contested by ITCO, as it concedes that repair services were conducted at the Amelia facility beginning *1298 in 1985[2] for which sales taxes were erroneously not collected. A penalty of 25 percent of this amount, or $4,317.32, was assessed against ITCO, which is also not contested.

ITCO argues that its cleaning services do not constitute repairs within the meaning of the applicable taxing statute and parish ordinance. A substantial part of the March 10 hearing was devoted to testimony on the technical details of those services ITCO categorizes as cleaning, for the purpose of demonstrating that these services could not be considered repairs. The crux of ITCO's position is that since taxing statutes are construed strictly against the taxing authority, and the basis of the assessment against ITCO was for sales of services constituting repairs, if the services are not actually repairs, the tax is invalid. As for Assumption's second, alternative theory for the assessment, that these services are taxable as laundry services, ITCO contends that this alternative theory was not the basis for the actual assessment, and even if it were accepted as such, the cleaning services provided by ITCO do not constitute the type of laundry services intended by the statute and ordinance.

As described at the hearing before the Board, the cleaning services performed by ITCO are limited to a specific type of pipe used in the oil and natural gas industry, referred to as tubing, which is pipe with a diameter of up to 4½ inches. ITCO performs both internal and external cleaning of pipe, by using brushes, high pressure sand and waterblast machines, and pneumatic scraping methods. All cleaning processes are directed to the removal of rust and dirt which accumulate in oil drilling operations, or to naturally occurring corrosion resulting from exposure of metal to air. Additionally, applications of a lightweight oil or grease may be made to protect the cleaned surface or threads, and identifying markings may be added or removed for ITCO's customers. The testimony of ITCO's president was that during the procedures categorized as cleaning services, there is no substantive change of the pipe itself. The whole purpose of the cleaning is to keep the pipe from changing or deteriorating.

Thus, ITCO argues, these procedures are not repairs, as nothing "broken" is fixed. Nor are these procedures the type of laundry service encompassed by La.R.S. 47:301(14)(e) and section 1.17(5), which talk about conventional laundering of dry goods, such as clothes and furniture.

ITCO's arguments and the Board's actions stand or fall based on the construction of the two statutes (and their counterpart ordinances) as to the nature of the disputed services, and the effect given the 1968 letter from the Department of Revenue and Taxation, if any. We turn to consideration of the law and evidence presented.

APPLICABLE LAW AND FINDINGS

La.R.S. 47:302C levies a sales tax on specifically defined services, as set forth in § 301(14).

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558 So. 2d 1296, 1990 WL 15817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/intracoastal-pipe-serv-v-assump-parish-sales-and-use-tax-dept-lactapp-1990.